C.E. said:
Sir, you seem very unrealistically negative about the entire possibility of a multiverse.
I am. I am unrealistically negative to un-realism . Since that question touches the matter of "belief" and is untestable, it's viable for me to believe whatever I like. And the multiverse theories are so well untestable built, that they give me this freedom...so it's not me who has the problem with being "suspicious", it's the theory's problem that allows for such suspicion to rise.
C.E. said:
Just because there is not science to prove or disprove something does not negate it's potential existence.
Just because there is no science to prove or disprove it, it is unscientific. As a philosophy would be.
and by no means I want to say that being non-scientific is bad (maths is not bad), it's just a state.
C.E. said:
f you are so inclined to NOT believe in the possible future discoveries then just simply look to the past and give a thought to the potential future. At one point "the major scientific discoveries" of the world included first thinking the Earth was flat, then round, then they found planets and discovered the sun and all it's bodies orbited the earth...to think otherwise could possibly land you in prison or even executed...well we know the truth is planets orbits the sun...
Taking that into account at some point they thought only one sun, one solar system, one galaxy, etc...but come to find out there are trillions upon trillions of each.
The fact that we only learn the theories that successfully described the world, doesn't mean that theories are a priori correct. In fact even when you pick up one theory by proving it experimentally, all the rest that were invented to give answers to the same questions are pushed back. So you can say that for one theory to be right, one or more were wrong/unrealistic.
How are the stars an indication that a multiverse exists?
C.E. said:
In fact through out all of creation and existence itself there seems to be at least pairs of things all the way down to many of the very building blocks of matter itself. On top of that it seems existence itself is cyclical, things are born and things die, the remnants either create new similar life, a different life or both. It stands to reason then that this single universe that we are fixated on only needs a little more time, technology and science to prove there is actually more than one. I can actually envision trillions upon trillions of universes all being born, living and dying in this natural process of physical existence and our universe in all it's enormity is only a single thing that will also one day pass away and bring about a new and different universe in it's wake. This may also give more credence to the big bang theory by supplying a location of the bang before it 'banged'. Maybe the death of a previous universe was the bang that created this one...maybe two universes collided to make the bang. So much to be discovered yet that we shouldn't close our minds to ever...
Of course I cannot prove/disprove that statement, as it's philosophical and not scientific. I could only accept/deny it. Also in order to avoid a philosophical discussion (at least in a thread- if you want PM me), it's better to leave it at this: I personally deny it..
For me questions make sense if I can find someway to prove them right or wrong. A multiverse cannot be proven because you can't actually go to some other universe (as long as you are not 'high') and/or work with it. If the question by itself lacks this feature, I consider it "something else". Maybe it's fun for some coffee break discussion, or after a Star Wars movie, or working with it in a pure mathematical way, but it's not a scientific question...